Imprecise Interrupt wrote:
onewithhim wrote:
Imprecise Interrupt wrote:
John of Patmos incorporated into Revelation a great number of references to existing scriptures, not all of which would become canon. Was there any scripture that referred to the ‘second death’ and if so what did it mean?
The second death means the death from which no one wakes up. No resurrection, no more chances. It is for the incorrigibly evil people that will not be good.
I have seen references in other books, but I'll have to get back to you on that. I need to look them up.
A lot of what you posted has already been discussed on this thread. Please go back and take a minute to see what has already been commented on.
I went through the entire thread before posting and again now to make sure I did not miss anything. I saw nothing at all about the phrase 'the second death' having been used in Targum Isaiah or anywhere else prior to Revelation. That was my main point, tying together all the indications of the fate of the unrighteous as being eternal conscious punishment by fire as indicated by John of Patmos by reference to that phrase. Of course I duplicated some quotes from Revelation. It was necessary to connect it all together.
If you have any evidence that there was another meaning to the phrase 'the second death' that was around in the 1st century, I would be glad to see it.
OK, maybe I"m slow on the draw. Did you say what you think the second death is, according to what John wrote? I must have missed it. I'm getting old.
"The second death" as a phrase is not anywhere else other than Revelation, but the
meaning is throughout the Scriptures. Someone said that Revelation is constructed of SYMBOLISM. This is true for most of the book. What the SYMBOLS mean is vastly important for us to grasp. I think it has been clearly shown that FIRE is used to illustrate the total obliteration of a wicked person, just as a piece of paper lit on fire will disappear, to be no more.
So, with that knowledge, we can go through the entire Bible and observe what backs that up.
From the beginning we see that the punishment for rebellion against YHWH is
returning to the ground. "For out of it you were taken. For dust you are and to dust you will return." (Genesis 3:19)
No indication anywhere from God that they would live on in the spirit realm and suffer there.
We can see constant reminders throughout that the wicked will PERISH---not live on--- as in Psalms and Proverbs, for example.
"For evil men will be
done away with...The wicked will
perish; the enemies of Jehovah will
vanish like glorious pastures;
they will vanish like smoke." (Psalm 37:9,20)
"When the storm passes by,
the wicked one will be no more..." (Proverb 10:25)
Speaking of wicked rulers: "They are
dead; they will NOT live. Powerless in death, they will not rise up. For you have turned your attention to them
to ANNIHILATE them and destroy all mention of them." (Isaiah 26:14)
Jesus inferred what the wicked ones will experience: "God loved the world so much that he gave his only-begotten Son, so that everyone exercising faith in him might not be
DESTROYED but have everlasting life." (John 3:16)
Paul also wrote plainly about what the wicked will experience.....not a literal fire, but destruction:
"The wages sin pays is
DEATH..." (Romans 6:23)
"These very ones will undergo the judicial punishment of
everlasting destruction..." (2 Thessalonians 1:9)
So it is clear that wicked people will be completely annihilated, therefore the symbolism of Revelation should not throw us off. It backs up the idea that the wicked, along with Satan, will not be alive somewhere, but will be gone forever. "The second death" can be understood to be that destruction that will be forever complete.
